Houston's perfect storm would feed on late summer's warm waters as it barreled northward across the Gulf of Mexico, slamming into the coast near Freeport.

A landfall here would allow its powerful upper-right quadrant, where the waves move in the same direction as the storm, to overflow Galveston Bay. Within an hour or two, a storm surge, topping out at 20 feet or more, would flood the homes of 600,000 people in Harris County. The surge also would block the natural drainage of flooded inland bayous and streams for a day or more.

Coastal residents who ignored warnings to flee would have no hope of escape as waters swelled and winds roiled around their homes. Very likely, hundreds, perhaps even thousands, would die.

Meanwhile, as the storm moved over western Harris County, its most dangerous winds, well in excess of 120 mph even inland, would lash the Interstate 45 corridor, including Clear Lake, the Texas Medical Center and downtown.

Many older buildings could not withstand such winds.

Anything not tied down, from trees to mobile homes to light poles, would become missiles, surreally tumbling and flying through the air, flattening small houses, shattering skyscraper windows and puncturing roofs.

"Unfortunately, we're looking at massive devastation," said Roy Dodson, president of the engineering firm Dodson & Associates, which Harris County asked to model realistic "worst-case scenarios" for a major hurricane hitting the area.

Dodson's firm modeled more than 100 storms of varying power, speed and landfall. It concluded that a large Category 4 or Category 5 -- a storm only moderately larger than the four that struck Florida last summer -- would cause as much as $40 billion to $50 billion in damage. That's 10 times the cost of Tropical Storm Allison and approximately the city of Houston's entire budget for the next 15 years.

And this wasn't an academic exercise. Of the 17 Category 4 and Category 5 storms that have struck the United States since 1900, three, all Category 4 storms, have hit the Greater Houston area -- unnamed storms in 1900 and 1915 and Carla in 1961.

Coastal development

With considerable coastal development since then and lower elevations because of groundwater pumping, no one knows what will happen when a major storm hits. But what's clear is that models of a hurricane's three modes of destruction -- winds, storm surge and inland flooding from heavy rainfall -- offer little comfort.

With sustained winds between 131 mph and 155 mph, the power of a Category 4 storm exceeds that of most building codes.

Newer skyscrapers, including many built during Houston's downtown boom in the '80s, were modeled in wind tunnels to determine their performance in extreme weather events. Most should survive the storm, Wittry said. And the downtown window loss like that experienced during Hurricane Alicia, a Category 3 storm that struck in 1983, actually could be less in a bigger storm.

That's because roofs that were then anchored by gravel -- which become bullets in high winds -- are now held down by specialized concrete that should not blow off, Wittry said.

Residential homes, built with less exacting standards and lesser materials, would fare worse.

"You'll definitely see more significant damage in residential construction," he said. "Lower-end homes, or some homes in older areas, would probably be completely destroyed."

Tie-downs, a structural device that prevents wind blowing over a structure, creating a vortex and sucking off the roof, have been mandatory only since the late 1980s, Wittry said.

Various studies of a large storm hitting the Houston area have estimated that 100,000 to 125,000 homes would be destroyed.

20-foot wall of water

More devastation would be caused by winds blowing over the Gulf of Mexico and pushing surface water inland -- creating up to a 20-foot storm surge. Such a wall of water would swamp most development near Galveston Bay, including Texas City, Kemah and Johnson Space Center. Varying levels of water would flood much of the area between Sam Houston Parkway and the bay.

On Galveston Island, the seawall could hold back much of the storm surge, but at some point the water would creep onto the island from the bay side. The island's highest point is just 22 feet above sea level.

Much like a river becomes deeper and more turbulent when it narrows, a storm surge also can increase in height and intensity when its source of water narrows. Dodson said this has profound implications for the Port of Houston. Some models ended with a 30-foot wall of water in the Ship Channel near the port's turning basin, he said. "It would be huge," he said. "It could overwhelm chemical storage facilities, water treatment plants and other sensitive areas."

The port's severe-weather plan calls for most cargo ships to exit the facility and weather the storm at sea in preparation for the possibility of flooded buildings.

A waves expert at Texas A&M University at Galveston, Vijay Panchang, said he and colleagues were surprised when they observed wave data associated with Hurricane Ivan shortly before it slammed into Alabama last September.

A wave-measuring buoy about 60 miles south of Dauphin Island, before it snapped, registered an average wave height of about 50 feet, Panchang said. That means the biggest waves were a staggering 100 feet tall. Such wave heights, according to his modeling, should only occur every 300 years or so.

Either Ivan's waves were a freak event, or hurricane forecasters may need to adjust their wave expectations for large storms in the warm Gulf waters.

"This is from a storm that hit only a few hundred miles to the east of us," he said. "There's nothing to say that another storm won't create really big waves for us."

These large waves caused by Ivan may have been as responsible, if not more so, than the storm surge for severely damaging the I-10 bridge bear Pensacola, Fla., Panchang said.

Surprises after landfall

Engineers and forecasters say the most unpredictable element of a storm comes after landfall, when it either dumps rain and floods creeks and bayous or moves quickly enough that relatively little rain falls.

Tropical Storm Allison probably isn't a good model for what to expect. The system was so poorly organized and slow moving that some hurricane forecasters say it wasn't a tropical storm. In some areas of the city, enough rain fell to classify Allison as a 10,000-year rainfall event. Still, because a large hurricane's storm surge likely would block the flow of bayou waters into Galveston Bay, any significant rainfall could back up into inland streets and homes quickly, Dodson said.

The last major hurricane most Houston residents remember was Alicia, which made landfall on the west end of Galveston Island in August 1983.

Unfortunately, planners say, as devastating as that storm was, it's a poor predictor of what to expect from a larger, Category 4 or bigger storm.

Alicia's highest sustained winds on land were measured at 96 mph. Most of the Greater Houston area received just 5 inches of rain. Storm surges across much of the area were less than 10 feet, although Seabrook measured 12 feet.

BlueAngel wrote:
You know, it's all good and well that you are reporting what other people write about this hurricane; however, I reiterate that the storm's projected path will change as it always does.

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!![/quote]BlueAngel, I hope you don’t mind, but this kind of stuff is interesting enough that it deserves its own “thread”.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

Quote:

BlueAngel Wrote:

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I'm here, JIMBO, alive, walking this planet, a survivor of MKULTRA/Project Monarch and for that I am THANKFUL!!!

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

Mind Control is a SUBJECT of great concern to me because it involves more than just "programming" a slave for some future mission.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

When one thinks of mind control they usually equate it to a Manchurian Candidate. That does not even cover the spectrum of what is involved in their programs; particuarly Project Monarch, which is trauma-based.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I know that government conspiracies are real. I know that our government is corrupt. Both parties. So, if that was their goal for my future, I have no allegiance to either.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I have allegiance to my country. The America that should be!

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

Maybe people do lie to themselves to mask the reality that they lived, but as far as mind control victims are concerned most times the reality that they lived is so horrific that blocking it was the only way they survived.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

THEY DO NOT REMEMBER and, therefore, are not lying to themselves or anyone else. They can have dozens of alters. Psychological warfare ensues.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

Coupled with hypnosis, electricshock, drugs, sleep, water, food, sensory deprivation, etc., etc., etc., false memories implanted doesn't really allow all of the REAL memories and the entire picture to evolve once a victim/survivor is triggered into remembering their past abuse and incarceration in one of these programs.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

Trauma too horrible for the mind to endure is FORGOTTEN. Compartmentalized. This, the only way for mind control victims to survive the abuse. The brain's self-defense.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I was replying to NOMAD about the "Whiz Kid" and just making some general remarks as to memories I have as a child that seemed to parallel his experience. I was interested in his story and the fact that he was institutionalized because he was a threat to THEM and not himself.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I'd ultimately LOVE to interview him.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

JIMBO, I'm 48 years old...soon to be 49. I only uncovered this past life of mine about four years ago.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

That, my friend, is the essence and depth of mind control. The victim is unaware for decades that they were sujected to such vicious manipulation, control and abuse.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

When the memories surface, the question remains for those who are alive and were not killed or snuffed out in porn films. WHY?

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I admire Henry's work. And, by the way, I say "Oh, Henry," like the candy bar.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I know that there are many more like him who have been working behind the scenes for decades to uncover this CULT.

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I am open to feedback and any answers you may have are certainly welcome!!

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

InPeace,
BlueAngel

Wow,... that's pretty wild. I have read about

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

MKULTRA before, sometimes articles written by survivors like yourself, but I never thought I was going to meet anyone that had gone through like what you just described. A lot of bizarre stuff happening in our world. I’m speechless,…

Quote:

BlueAngel wrote:
It's all in my head, as I was told!!!

I am kind of tired now, but perhaps another time I’ll have the mental energy to continue…

BlueAngel wrote:
You know, it's all good and well that you are reporting what other people write about this hurricane; however, I reiterate that the storm's projected path will change as it always does.

This is good to know. Have you approved it
BlueAngel wrote:
Obviously, you believe your behavior to be mature.

Obviously, it is not!![/quote][/quote]
We Learned this behavior from you are you therefore less than mature or do you not like your game being played with you as you do with others.

BlueAngel wrote:
You know, it's all good and well that you are reporting what other people write about this hurricane; however, I reiterate that the storm's projected path will change as it always does.

This is good to know. Have you approved it
BlueAngel wrote:
Obviously, you believe your behavior to be mature.

Obviously, it is not!!

[/quote]
We Learned this behavior from you are you therefore less than mature or do you not like your game being played with you as you do with others.[/quote]

BlueAngel wrote:
You know, it's all good and well that you are reporting what other people write about this hurricane; however, I reiterate that the storm's projected path will change as it always does.

This is good to know. Have you approved it
BlueAngel wrote:
Obviously, you believe your behavior to be mature.

Obviously, it is not!!

We Learned this behavior from you are you therefore less than mature or do you not like your game being played with you as you do with others.[/quote]